Console table (one of a pair)

possibly by François Rournier

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 522

Made by François Roumier, these two console tables can be dated to around 1740. Sculpteur ordinaire du roi in 1721, Roumier was famous for this type of furniture and published a number of books such as the Livre de plusieurs Desseins de Pieds de Tables en Consoles, which was published after his death in 1750. Working for most of the royal residences, Roumier’s masterwork is a magnificent carved table supplied in 1737 for the Cabinet doré in Louis XV’s private apartments in Versailles.

The rich decoration of these two consoles is emblematic of the Régence (1715–1723) and the beginning of Louis XV’s reign. They illustrate the triumph of sculptors from the Bâtiments du Roi responsible for room paneling of which consoles and mirrors were part. Here the frieze is carved in the center with a heart-shaped cartouche pierced with a rose-window motif. Four dragons decorate the consoles, two flanking the cartouche and two others on the feet.

Console table (one of a pair), possibly by François Rournier (active 1716–46), Carved and gilded oak, with top of rouge royal marble, French

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